Ahmadinejad Offers to Be an Observer at Us Presidential Election
He denounces it as the "Great Satan" and frequently dismisses its power, but the overtures of the Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, to the US seem to grow ever more extravagant.
Having failed to win a response with an 18-page letter to President George Bush or to a request to visit the site of the September 11 2001 attack on New York, Ahmadinejad has offered himself as an observer in next year's presidential election.
The proposal came in a speech to volunteers with the Basij, a pro-regime militia. He said he was prompted by a belief that Americans would vote against the current administration in a truly free poll.
However, the terms of Ahmadinejad's offer appeared to betray some confusion about the potential candidates.
"If the White House officials allow us to be present as an observer in their presidential election we will see whether people in their country are going to vote for them again or not," he said. The US constitution prevents Bush from seeking a third consecutive term, while no member of his administration is expected to be in the running in next November's poll.
Bush and international human rights groups voiced doubts about the legitimacy of Iran's 2005 presidential election, which brought Ahmadinejad to power. More than 1,000 potential candidates were disqualified by the guardian council, a powerful body of clerics and judges.
Some domestic critics pointed out yesterday that Ahmadinejad's idea clashed with his government's opposition to allowing independent observers at Iranian elections. The interior ministry, controlled by one of the president's most hard-line allies, has rejected pressure for party representatives to be allowed to oversee proceedings at polling stations for next March's parliamentary poll.
The election is expected to provide a major test of Ahmadinejad's popularity. Leading regime figures, including two former presidents, Hashemi Rafsanjani and Mohammad Khatami, have warned against possible attempts to rig it through mass candidate disqualifications and other measures.
Having failed to win a response with an 18-page letter to President George Bush or to a request to visit the site of the September 11 2001 attack on New York, Ahmadinejad has offered himself as an observer in next year's presidential election.
The proposal came in a speech to volunteers with the Basij, a pro-regime militia. He said he was prompted by a belief that Americans would vote against the current administration in a truly free poll.
However, the terms of Ahmadinejad's offer appeared to betray some confusion about the potential candidates.
"If the White House officials allow us to be present as an observer in their presidential election we will see whether people in their country are going to vote for them again or not," he said. The US constitution prevents Bush from seeking a third consecutive term, while no member of his administration is expected to be in the running in next November's poll.
Bush and international human rights groups voiced doubts about the legitimacy of Iran's 2005 presidential election, which brought Ahmadinejad to power. More than 1,000 potential candidates were disqualified by the guardian council, a powerful body of clerics and judges.
Some domestic critics pointed out yesterday that Ahmadinejad's idea clashed with his government's opposition to allowing independent observers at Iranian elections. The interior ministry, controlled by one of the president's most hard-line allies, has rejected pressure for party representatives to be allowed to oversee proceedings at polling stations for next March's parliamentary poll.
The election is expected to provide a major test of Ahmadinejad's popularity. Leading regime figures, including two former presidents, Hashemi Rafsanjani and Mohammad Khatami, have warned against possible attempts to rig it through mass candidate disqualifications and other measures.

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- Arms Dealer Jailed for Sale of Iranian Guns to Kuwait
- A Humble Beginning Helped to Form Iran's New Hard Man
- Iran Parades Captured and Blindfolded Sailors on Tv
- Iranians Vote in Parliamentary Election
- US Military Chief Quits Amid Claims of Iran Rift
- UK Fears Iran Still Working on Nuclear Weapon
- Government Fights to Keep Ban on Main Iranian Opposition Group
- Decision Time for Us Over Iran Threat
- Iraqi Fighters 'grilled for Evidence on Iran'
- Iran Signals Space Ambitions With Rocket Launch
- Iran Claims Launch Into 'space' of Rocket Capable of Taking Satellites
- Iran Bans Public Executions Amid Death Sentence Boom
- UN Renews Pressure on Iran
- Iran's Supreme Leader Rebuffs Ahmadinejad in Gas Row
- Bush Takes Soundings on Iran
- Amnesty Demands Iran Ends 'grotesque' Stoning Executions
- Bush Urges Arab Allies to Confront Iran, 'the World's Leading Sponsor of State Terror'
- Iranian Man Stoned to Death for Committing Adultery
- Iran Native Drives Through Crowd on UNC-Chapel Hill Campus
- Iran Calls for End to Violence While Students Attend Suicide Bomber Seminars



